THE
DUBLIN
JOURNAl
OF
MEDICAL
SGIENCE.
MARCH, 1, 1911.
PART I. ORIGINAL
COMMUNICATIONS.
ART. u on a Case o] Myasthenia Gravis.a By T. GILLMA~ MOORREAD, M.D., F . R . C . P . I . D . P . H . ; Physician to the Royal City of Dublin Hospital. (Illus.) A ChSg of the obscure and rather unusual disease, Myasthenia Gravis, in which a fatal result occurred, and in which a complete post-mortem examination was obtained, having recently been under my observation, I have thought it might be of interest to bring before you the notes of the case, although unfortunately it throws no fresh light on the mtiology or treatment of the disease. Although an isolated case of the disease was recorded as long ago as 1685 by Willis, it was not until nearly two centuries later, in 1878, that Erb drew attention to its main features as constituting a distinct symptom group. Wilks, in the previons year, had reported a case of apparent bulbar paralysis without discoverable lesion in the medulla, which was undoubtedly a case of true myasthenia, b u t neither his paper nor that of Erb ~Read l~efore the Section of ~Iediclne of the Royal Academy of Medicine in Ireland on Friday, February 10, 1911.
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No~cs o~ a Case o.[ Mgasthcnia Gravi,5'.
attracted much attention in this country until an elaborate monograph on the subject was published by Campbell and Bramwell in 1900. Since then numerous cases have been observed in all parts of the world, and in 1907 Palmer was able to collect the records of 124 cases which h a d been published in the interval between that date and the appearance of Campbell and Bramwell's paper. Since 1907 many other cases have been reported, but with the exception of one or two scattered observations, very little additional information concerning the disease in any of its aspects has been gained. The essential symptoms of myasthenia gravis consist of paralysis of the voluntary muscles, nlore especially those supplied by the cranial nerves, varying in intensity and persistence, but usually more marked after nmscular effort, and accompanied by a peculiar nlyasthenic reaction when the muscles are stimulated by the faradic current. Anmngst the most comnmn paralyses are those of the ocular muscles, including the orbicularis palpebrarum and the levator of the upper eyelid, the lip muscles, those of the tongue, and those of the neck; but in severe eases, amongst which must be grouped the case which I am about to describe, almost all the nmscles of the body may be involved. The paralysis almost invariably tends to increase when the affected muscles are used, so that, for example, you may find that at the beginning of a conversat.ion the lip and tongue muscles may be used fairly well, but after a few minutes they become weakened, and soon may become so completely paralysed as to be hardly capable of being made to contract at all. The appearance presented by the patient is strongly suggestive of the existence of seine lesion of the nervous system, but up to the present, in spite of numerous careful examinations, none but the most insignificant changes in tim nervous system have been discovered, and even these infrequently, so that the description originally applied by Wilks still holds good. Some few pathological changes in the muscles and viscera have of late years been described, notably by
B y DR. T.
GILb,XtAN MOORHEAD.
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W e i g e r t and B u z z a r d , to which I will refer after reading the notes of m y case. The patient, a married woman, aged twenty-five, came to see me first on September 9, 1910, complaining of nervousness and menorrhagia. She had just previously been examined by a gyn~ecologist who sent me word that the pelvic organs were normal. Previous ]dstory.--With the exception of tim present sickness ~he patient stated tha~ she had never been ill before. She had been trained as a nurse in a New York hospital, and had got married in 1907. She had no children, and was deserted by her husband about a year after marriage, and some months after the development of the first s y m p t o m s of her present illness. Family history of no importance. History of present illness.--About March, 1908, the first s y m p t o m s were noticed. The patient found that her legs felt weak after slight exertion, and once or twice she fell in the street. The weakness later spread to the arms, neck, and jaw, and some difficulty in speaking was felt. All thc s y m p t o m s rapidly increased during 1908, but during the last eighteen months remained stationary. For six weeks prior to m y seeing her she was treated in a hospital for hysteria. Condition on examination.--The most striking feature in examining the patient was her facial appearance, which is well shown in the accompanying illustration. There was wellmarked bilateral ptosis, the lower lip drooped from the teeth, and the lower jaw hung down. The patient was quite unable to wrinkle her forehead. When asked to close her eyes one or two ineffectual contractions of the orbicularis palpebrarum were made, and then the muscle refused to contract altogether. Similarly the lips could be approximated two or three times, but could never be kept in apposition, and fatigue of the muscles soon became complete. In trying to speak the lower jaw moved a little, but after a few words it became necessary to support the jaw with the hand. There was almost complete external ophthahnoplegia, the only possible ocular m o v e m e n t being one in a downward and inward direction, but even this was very slight. The pupils re-acted normally but slowly; there was no n y s t a g m u s and uo retinal change, but diplopia was troublesome.
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Notes on a Case el Myasthenia Gravis.
The neck muscles were very weak, so that on attempting to move the head backwards it fell completely back as soon as a position beyond the vertical was reached. A sin~ilar but less marked loss of power was present in the muscles that move the head forwards. The muscles of the trunk were also weak, causing dii~culty in sitting up or turning in bed. Arm muscZcs.---The deltoid on each side was weak and atrophied, as were also the trapezii : the flexors and extensors of the elbow joint were fairly normal; the muscles of the fore-arm were all weak, and the power of grasp was very slight and could not be maintained. A slight supinator and triceps reflex was obtained on each side. Lcg m~scles.--There was sufficient general weakness of the leg muscles to prevent the patient from standing without suppor~, but in bed the most marked weakness noted was in the flexors of the hip ioint. The gluteals also were weal~ and much at;cophied. There was moderate power of flexion and extension at the ankle and knee joints. The patellar and ankle reflexes were brisk on both sides, but neither rectus nor ankle clonus was present. The plantar reflex was normal. The power of the sphincters was considerably impaired, and on some days there was complete toss of control over these muscles. Speech.--This was much impaired, apparently due to the weakness of the face and jaw Inuscles and of the tongue. The tongue was tremulous, and could be protruded only with difficulty; it was much atrophied. There was no paralysis of the soft palate or vocal cords. At times difficulty in swallowing was experienced. No sensory disturbance of any kind was noted, and with the exception of slight persistent menorrhagia no visceral abnormality was found. The blood pressure was 120 m.m. I t g ; the urine was normal, except for the presence of a small trace of albumen. The blood count showed 3,700,000 red cells, 70 per cent. I-Ib, and white cells 7,200, with 76.5 neutrophiles ~nd 23.5 lymphocytes. Neither hyaline nor eosinophile cells were found in any of the three counts that were made. Electrical rcactions.--The face and arm muscles were tested with the galvanic current and contracted normally, the kathodal closure contraction being stronger than the
By DR. T. GILt,MAN MOORttEAD.
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anodal closure contraction. A distinct myasthenie re-action was obtained with the faradic current in the face muscles of the right side, and in the flexor sublimis digitorum. In the latter muscle failure of response occurred after 25 separate stimuli with tbe faradic current; after an interval of a few minutes the muscle again responded, but was again rapidly fatigued. Progrcs.~ of case.--The patient remained in much the same condition as I have described for ten days, occasional slight remissions in the degree of paralysis being observed. On the ele~ienth day she was attacked with sudden dyspncea and cardiac failure, became quite unable to speak or swallow, and died in a couple of hours. Comment on the symptoms exhibited by this patient is unnecessary, as in almost every detail the case was typical. It may, however, be worth while emphasising the fact that there was marked atrophy of the gluteal muscles, the deltoids, and of the tongue, inasmuch as absence of atrophy was at one time regarded as an important diagnostic sign. The mode of death with dyspncea and cardiac failure is that most often met with. Nothing need be said regarding differential diagnosis, as to one familiar with the disease mistake would be almost an impossibility. Hysteria is the condition with which myasthenia gravis has most often been counfounded, and, as already stated, the mistake had been made in the present case previous to my seeing her. The well-defined ophthalmoplegia should, however, be enough to make the distinction, although it may be admitted that many of the symptoms are suggestive of a neurosis. Pathology.--Morbid anatomists in seeking for a cause for the striking phenomena exhibited by a case of myasthenia gravis, or for the cause of death have hitherto been as a rule disappointed by the paucity of pathological changes in the body. The nervous system has been diligently investigated, but no striking or constant changes have been found either in the cerebral cortex, the cranial nerve nuclei, the spinal cord, or the peripheraJ
166
Notes on a Casc of Myasthenia Gravis.
nerves. The first pathological finding of importance was made by Weigert in 1901, who recorded a case of myasthenia in which he had found a sarcoma of the thymus gland, and since then about a dozen other cases have been reported in which thymic abnormalities were present. In some cases there has been simple hypertrophy of the gland, and in others malignant tumours. Such changes have, however, been found in about 20 per cent. of investigated cases only, and cannot be regarded as a constunt lesion. More constant are slight changes in the muscles. I n addition to the sarcoma of the thymus Weigert found in his case small areas of cellular infiltration in the perimysium and between the fibres of the muscles which he examined, and to these accumulations Buzzard, who regards them as constant features of the disease, subsequently gave the name of lymphorrhages. They consist of groups of lymphocyte-like cells scattered here and there between the muscle fibres, and occasionally similar cell groups are found in the viscera. In addition to the lymphorrhages proliferation of the sarcolemmul nuclei and simple atrophy of some of the muscle fibres may also be present. Various isolated abnormalities of the viscera have been reported, but no constant change in any of them has been found. The findings in the present case were as follows : - - T h e thymus gland was persistent, and possessed two welldefined lobes extending down over the pericardium; microscopically it was normal, but, as in other cases, contained no eosinophile cells. The thyroid gland was somewhat enlarged, and microscopically was more cellular than normal. The kidney was slightly congested and showed parenchymatous changes; both ovaries were enlarged and cystic. The other viscera, including the red marrow and the pituitary body, were normal microscopically and macroscopically. Dr. Wigham kindly examined the spinal cord, the medulla, the pons, the central nuclei, and the cortex in the Rolandic region of the brain and reported them as normal. Macroscopically the brain and
By DR. T. GILLMAN 1VIOORHEAD.
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spinal cord were quite normal. As regards the muscles, sections were made from the levator patpebrae superioris, the masseter and the pectoralis major, and in all ] examined over 400 sections. The masseter and pectoralis major appeared to be normal, with the exception of one doubtful lymphorrhage in the pectoralis. The collection of cells, however, in this particular instance was found not between the muscle fibres but in the interstitial connective tissue. In the levator palpebrae muscle some atrophy of muscle fibres was noted, marked proliferation of sarcolemmal nuclei was present, and in many of the sections scattered uninuclear cells with rounded nuclei were found between the muscle fibres. Nothing at all approaching in appearance, however, to the lymphorrhages as figured by Buzzard were found, and after a most careful search in three of the muscles of a very typical case ] feel inclined to throw doubt on the universal presence of lymphorrhages in the muscles of myasthenic cases. I submitted some of my sections to Dr. Farquhar Buzzard, who very kindly examined them, and agreed that no typical lymphorrhages were to be seen, and on his advice I subsequently had serial sections cut from the remaining available muscle tissue with the results I have stated. ./Etiology and Pathogenesis.--Practically nothing is known regarding the causation or pathogenesis of the disease. Statistical collections of cases show that women are rather more liable to be attacked than men, and that most cases occur between twenty and forty years of age. In many, emotional disturbance, overwork, or infectious diseases are mentioned ~s preceding events, but as similar events are not uncommon in the lives of a majority of the race their further consideration here is, to say the least, uncalled for. A distinct history of menstrual irregularities is frequently to be obtained, as in the case recorded, but here again the trouble is so common as to be probably void of ~etiological significance in connection with myasthenia ; nor can one place much importance on observed variations in the disease during the course of pregnancy,
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Notes on a Case o/ Myasthenia Gravis.
inasmuch as the physiological changes during pregnancy are well known to exert a modifying influence on any concomitant disease. More interest attaches to the observed changes in the thymus gland and muscles. The whole aspect of the disease recalls the symptoms met with in Addison's disease or in acidosis, and in consequence it is often assumed that the cause is to be found either in the presence of some unknown toxin in the body or in the absence of some internal secretion, possibly that of the thymus gland. So little, however, is known concerning the physiological functions of the thymus, and so infrequent are obvious lesions of it present in myasthenia, that for the present it seems unprofitable to further discuss the theory, nor does the mental evolvement of a hypothetical toxin solve the difficulty. It is possible that wider researches in the domain of bio-chemistry and internal secretions will throw light on the problem, the solution of which is all important, as hitherto treatment has for the most part been more harmless than curative, and it is unlikely that any advance in therapeutics will be made on empirical lines. The constant presence of changes in the muscles seems only what one would expect from the clinical symptoms, and from analogy with other diseases might be regarded rather as secondary than primary phenomena. Those who regard the lymphorrhages as all-important pathological concomitants have thought that their existence might mechanically interfere with the lymphatic drain of the metabolic products resulting from muscular fatigue, thereby establishing a condition of muscular toxaemia. Such a theory, however, can only be deemed fantastic, having regard to the number of available lymph paths and the scarcity of the lymphorrhages in a majority of cases. Of the numerous other suggestions I will refer only to two. In exophthalmic go~tre a persistent thymus is often found in association with the enlarged thyroid
By DR. T. GILLMAN MOORHEAD.
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and nervous symptoms predominate. So also in myasthenia unusual conditions in both thyroid and thymus may be found. A consideration of the facts appears to me to point to t.he conclusion that in the future physiologists and pathologists should seek for an explanation of both normal and abnormal metabolic changes more in a study of the inter-relationships of organs and of the effects which the products of one produce upon the functions of another than in the study of tbe individual organs as isolated structures. The changes in the thyroid have produced the unproductive and unsatisfactory theory that some change in its secretion may account, for the symptoms of myasthenia. To my mind they should suggest rather a s6ries of investigations into the effect produced by the thyroid and other secretions on all the other glands of the body, in the hope that (luring such a course of invest igations collateral light might be thrown on the ,~tiology of many obscure diseases. Lastly, Chvostek, contrasting the symptoms of tetany with those of myasthenia, and assumin that the former symptoms 8,re caused by a defective supply of the secretion of the parathyroid bodies, has lately advanced the further assumption that an over-supply of the same secretion is the cause of the latter symptoms. Such illbased theorising deserves scant attention, but that it gives the opportunity of a protest against the prevailing tendency to lay the onus of producing a group of serious but mtiologically unsolved diseases on the probably harmless parathyroid glands. In making these few remarks my criticism has, I fear, been of the destructive type, but to my mind nothing is gained by wild theorising on insufficient ground, and sooner than accept an unproved and unlikely theory I prefer to frankly admit our wtiological ignorance.